The only picture Jacob Walker of Punta Gorda has of himself in uniform was this one taken at Fort Benning, Ga. in August of 1941 a few months before the Japanese attack on the U.S. fleet a Pearl Harbor. Photo provided

Jacob Walker of Punta Gorda drove a Sherman tank during World War II

Jacob Walker of Punta Gorda, Fla. remembers, like it was yesterday, how he joined the service before the Second World War more than 75 years ago.

“Seven of us boys were sitting along a creek in the Tennessee hills drinking moonshine. We dared each other to sign up for the Army. All of us, except one, went down and signed up,” the 94-year-old veteran recalled. “We got $21 pay a month as privates. That was a lot of money for a 17-year-old boy.”

Boot camp for Walker was Fort Benning, Ga. It was August 1941 when he arrived at Benning, fewer than four months before the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor forcing the U.S. into World War II.

He was in the 2nd Armored Division commanded by Gen. George Patton, who was about to make the cover of “Life” magazine as the U.S. Army’s most notable tank commander. Walker would spend his time during the war as a Sherman tank driver.

What he remembers most about the colorful general is an inspection Patton held at Benning. Walker was singled out by the general because his rifle didn’t pass inspection.

“He wore white gloves during inspections. He’d take your gun with those white gloves on and if they got grease spots on them you’d had it,” the old soldier recalled. “Because of that, I had to dig a 6 by 6 hole. A match was thrown in the hole and then I got to bury it. After all that I had to dig the match stick back up.
Shortly after the Pearl Harbor attack he and his armored unit went to war.

“We went to New York City, they put us on a ship and we sailed for North Africa. We came into Casablanca in North Africa,” Walker said.

The first big battle he was involved in took place at the Kasserine Pass. It was the first time American and German forces of any size clashed in North Africa. German Gen. Erwin Rommel defeated the U.S. 1st. Armored Division in the pass with his Afrika Korps. That’s when Walker and his 2nd Armored Division were thrown into the breach.

“After 1st Armored was knocked off we took their place in the Pass. Eventually we won the battle with the help of the British and pushed the Germans back toward the coast,” Walker said. “We chased them all the way to Tunisia. The Germans had big guns mounted on a hill we had to take at Tunis.”

After additional fighting by American forces the U.S. troops finally captured the German bunkers and the enemy guns. A short time later 230,000 German soldiers, with their backs against the sea, surrendered en masse.

Patton and the American 7th Army, of which Walker and the 2nd Armored Division were a part, hopped across the Mediterranean to Sicily. The old soldier remembers nothing much about the amphibious landing and invasion of the island.

“Operation Husky” is what it was called. It pitted Lt.vGen. Patton’s 7th Army and British Gen. Bernard Montgomery’s British 8th Army against the Germans and Italian forces. Both invasion armies moved onto Sicily from the southern shore. The Americans headed west along the coast toward Messina on the north side of the island. The British troops moved north along the eastern shore of the island for the same destination—Messina.

The Allies faced the Axis forces headed by the Hermann Göering Division, the 15th Panzer-grenadiers and the Italian 6th Army. By early August 1943, a little more than a month after the start of the Allied invasion, American and British armies pushed the German and Italian troops into vacating Messina and escaping to Italy.

Walker remembers very well what happened to him next. He and the rest of the 2nd Armored Division chased after the Germans and wound up penned down on the beach at Anzio, Italy.

“The beach at Anzio was a tough place to be,” he recalled “We lost a lot of men before we got off that beach.”

“Anzio Annie” is the name the Americans gave the big German cannon at Anzio. It was a 288 millimeter railroad gun that fired a projectile weighing more than 550 pounds at stranded Allied forces on a regular basis. Walker and the other men in his outfit could see the giant shell fly over just before it struck a target and exploded.

German Field Marshal Albert Kesselring had the Allies pinned down on the beach for six months, until June 1944, when Gen. Mark Clark and his American 5th Army broke out of the Anzio beachhead and swung north toward Rome.

Gen. Clark was obsessed with having his 5th Army conquer Rome. When he arrived at the gates of Rome with his army it had been declared it was an “open city.” Not a gun was to be fired within the confines of “The Eternal City.” So Gen. Clark did not become its conqueror.

“When we got to Rome we got a break,” Walker recalled. “We got couple of days off that gave us time to regroup. We even went to Pompey to see the reclaimed ancient city that had been buried by a volcano centuries ago.”

It wasn’t long after Rome that Walker and his Sherman tank crew was headed north up the Italian boot chasing Germans.

“By the time we got to the Alps in northern Italy the German’s were losing. They were running out of gas. They left their tanks that were out of gas and ran off,” he said.

“We hadn’t gotten out of our Sherman in a week. The sergeant in command of our five-man tank stopped the Sherman and had us take a break,” Walker recalled. “My assistant driver took his helmet off when he got out of the tank. I was sitting down beside him on the tank when a German mortar shell hit a nearby tree and showered us with shrapnel. A piece of shrapnel went through his head. It killed him right there.

“After he was killed I got back in the tank and cried. I was scared to death,” he said.

When the war in Europe ended Walker and his tank crew had reached the Black Forest near the Rhine River in Germany. Russian forces were on the east side of the river. He and the other American forces never reached Berlin. The German capital was captured by Russian troops.

He remembers going back to France to catch a ship for home. The boat arrived at the New York City docks and victory celebrations were still going on, but Walker didn’t see much of the revelry. He and his fellow 2nd Armored Division soldiers went to Texas by train where they were discharged. Their war was over.

Eventually Walker got a job working for Blue Grass Sausage Co. in Covington, Ky. After 31 years working as a sausage maker he retired. He and Betty, his wife of 62 years, came to Florida. The couple have two children: Debbie and Beverly.Name: Jacob WalkerD.O.B: 1 Feb 1923Hometown: Robbins, Tenn.Currently: Punta Gorda, Fla.Entered Service: August 1941Discharged: 1946Rank: PrivateUnit: 2nd Armored DivisionBattles/Campaigns: North Africa, Sicily, Italy, France, Battle of the Bulge, Kasserine Pass

This story was first published in the Charlotte Sun newspaper, Port Charlotte, Fla. on Monday, Feb. 20, 2017 and is republished with permission.

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With all the deepest respect to Mr. Walker, someone needs to check their facts on this story and correct as needed. It all adds up until Anzio. The only way Mr. Walker could have been part of the Anzio Landings would have been if he had been transferred out of the 2nd Armored and into one of the other 2 tank units that took place in the Italian invasions. The 2nd Armored took Sicily but rested awhile on Sicily and then transferred to England in the fall of ’43 to regroup and train for the Normandy Landings. Sure would like to know what tank unit he was in after Sicily and why he would have transferred….or did he???

Jacob,
It wasn’t Mr.Walker’s facts that were in question. The mistake was mine, I’m the guy who wrote the story. I knew his army fought their way through Anzio, never thinking that maybe the 2nd Armored wasn’t there. I apoligize for my historical shortcomings.

Don, Many thanks for the contrite reply. No offense was directed to you or the author. Believe me, I understand how difficult it can be to keep the facts in line. I think I figured out what happened to Mr. Walker here and I’m hoping this helps you. I’m guessing the facts are straight up until Sicily and explains why he has no recollection of Sicily as he almost certainly could not have been there. Sounds like he started out with the 2nd Armored (they trained at Benning) and as happened with many of our 2nd AD guys, got pulled into the 1st Armored when they needed to replenish their tank regiments in North Africa following the heavy losses they suffered at the Kasserine Pass. I should have been clued to that when he said, “we took their place in the Pass”. That’s when he became part of the newly rebuilt 1st Armored. The 1st Armored went on to be part of the Anzio landings and the history Mr. Walker describes following that is consistent with 1st Armored routes and campaigns. So technically speaking, I’m betting he served in both the 1st and 2nd Armored – mystery solved! Might be beneficial to have a conversation with him just to confirm that.
Whatever the case, thanks for sharing and posting these articles – always enjoy reading them.